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The second largest city in Japan is Yokohama, a bustling port and major industrial center. The city is the capital of Kanagawa prefecture. Yokohama owes its existence to international trade. It developed as a port only after Japan opened its doors to foreign traders in the 19th century. The city is located on the west side of Tokyo Bay, approximately 20 miles (32 kilometers) southwest of Tokyo. Yokohama forms part of the vast urban area known as Greater Tokyo or the Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area. This urban area is the largest in Japan.

Yokohama’s climate is mild in winter and hot and humid in summer. Early summer and early autumn are rainy seasons. Tropical cyclones, called typhoons, often strike in September.

Yokohama stands on a coastal plain shut in by hills. The central business district, which contains many major banks and other businesses, is concentrated on the port. This district stretches southward along Yokohama Bay from the main Yokohama railway station. It extends through the newer Minato Mirai 21 district to the historic Yokohama city center just south and east of the bay. The 70-story Landmark Tower is located in Minato Mirai 21. Directly on the waterfront is Yamashita Park, where the many harbor facilities are most easily observed. Nearby is Yokohama’s large Chinatown.

A newer business district, including information technology and related businesses, has developed to the north and farther inland from the central business district. It centers on the Shin-Yokohama railway station, the city’s stop for high-speed bullet trains (Shinkansen). To the east of this district lies the Soji Temple, Yokohama’s largest Buddhist shrine. It dates from 1321 and was moved to Yokohama in 1911. The city’s industrial area lies along the coast to the north of the central business district, toward the city of Kawasaki.

On the south side of the central business district is Yokohama Park with a gymnasium and stadium. The city’s professional baseball team, the Yokohama BayStars, plays there. Outside and to the southeast of the central business district is Sankei Garden. Several ancient buildings, including a tea ceremony house, have been moved there from other parts of the country. A hilly residential area named Yamate lies to the south of the business district.

Yokohama has several notable museums. The Yokohama Archives of History specializes in the period when Japan was opened to foreign trade and is housed in the building where one of the treaties dating from this period was signed. Other museums include the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Cultural History and museums devoted to art, science and industry, silk production and trade, dolls, and the city’s maritime history. Major educational institutions include Yokohama National University and Yokohama City University.

Foreign trade has always been important to Yokohama’s economy. Prior to World War II silk was the major export, but since that time such products as automobiles, machinery, chemical products, and steel have supplanted it. Imported items include petroleum and agricultural products. A long belt of industrial factories extends from Yokohama through Kawasaki to Tokyo and is known as the Keihin Industrial Zone. Goods produced in Yokohama include ships, automobiles, chemicals, electronics, communications equipment, and software.

Yokohama was nothing more than a small fishing village when it was opened to foreign trade in 1859. The Harris Treaty of 1858 had actually opened the nearby port of Kanagawa (later incorporated into Yokohama). However, Kanagawa was a key station on Japan’s main east-west road leading to Tokyo, and the Japanese government did not want foreigners to have access to it. Instead, Yokohama was opened. Yokohama quickly became Japan’s most cosmopolitan city and the door through which Western influences entered Japan. Japan’s first daily newspaper was founded in Yokohama in 1871. The following year Japan’s first railway line opened between Yokohama and Tokyo.

A devastating earthquake destroyed much of the city in 1923, as did bombing in 1945, during World War II. However, Yokohama was rebuilt each time, and it grew dramatically after the war. Migrants from Tokyo swelled its population, and it is now something of a Tokyo suburb. Population (2010) 3,688,773.

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